Indian Creek Camping Reminder: Fees start this weekend

Hi Friends,Just a reminder that the official start to fees-for-camping at the established camp grounds at Indian Creek starts this weekend and now group sites may be reserved on-line.

New overnight use fees in the Indian Creek Corridor include Creek Pasture and Superbowl campgrounds, which will be $5 per site. New group site fees at Indian Creek Falls will be set at $25, plus $2 per person per night and new group site fees at Creek Pasture will be set at $25, plus $3 per person per night. âThe fees will help offset increasing operational costs, including campground cleaning, restroom maintenance and waste disposal that have come with increased visitation, as the area continues to gain popularity,â BLM officials said in the news release.

The BLM uses funds generated by the recreation fee program to âprovide a safe and enjoyable experience for visitors by maintaining facilities and making site improvements such as picnic tables, fire rings, accessible sites, vault toilets, and shade shelters,â the news release stated.

A self-pay fee station will be located at the campground entrances. Group sites can be reserved online through the recreation.gov website. Individual campsites cannot be reserved in advance, and are on a first-come, first-served basis.

The business plan, which includes information regarding campground infrastructure and maintenance needs, is available online at: blm.gov/&acirc;¦/planâ¦/FinalBusinessPlanCampgrounds.html.

Copy/paste from their FB page. Between what FB and MP do to shorten links, I'm not surprised.Here's the direct link to the pdf:http://www.blm.gov/style/medialib/blm/ut/monticello_fo/_planning/FinalBusinessPlan.Par.52317.File.dat/MonticelloCampgroundsFinalBusinessPlan.pdf

will the fees generate enough revenue to plow down the walls, and build giant gym walls with crack, and mind-bogglingly expensive mechanical devices that accept camming devices, so that you may be learning to climb indoors traditionally?

Aleks Zebastian wrote:climbing friend, will the fees generate enough revenue to plow down the walls, and build giant gym walls with crack, and mind-bogglingly expensive mechanical devices that accept camming devices, so that you may be learning to climb indoors traditionally?

Does anyone else read Alek's posts with an Arnold Schwarzenegger voice in their heads?

JK- wrote:If you can afford 9373 identical cams to climb in indian creek you can afford $5 bucks to camp... As the sport grows, camping fees and user fees are going to be more and more a part of continued access.

climbing friend,

soon you will pay $107 for day pass to Indian Creek yes? Or $1800 for season pass, to stand in 40-deep line for crack? Much like you resort skiing mmmmyyyyessss???? myah?

and you have gondola going down center of canyon, for smoking of dope and getting to your preferred crag of the preference.

And let us all start blogs, podcasts, websites, and magazines in attempt to profit from the climbing sport, and then whine about increased crowdings.

Also the BLM I pay to them with my tax dollar already many years passing, so they must not act like fees shall cover all costs.

Get it right: Aleks is eastern european and speaks in a no-nonsense manner of quiet wisdom and confidence. He grew up behind the iron curtain where all kinds of strings were pulled just to acquire a handful of steel biners. Being alone in a campground is impossible as he will pluck you out of your isolation and shove a bottle of Becherovka in your hands, and when climbing possibly gently admonish you if you do something unnecessarily risky or foolish.